Skip to main content

Double Fine’s generation-spanning Massive Chalice leaves Early Access in June

Massive Chalice
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Last month, the second act of Double Fine’s Broken Age was finally released, bringing an end to a saga that began with the launch of that game’s Kickstarter campaign in 2012. With the final game shipped, the company has been able to focus completely on other projects it has had in the works, chiefly the turn-based strategy title Massive Chalice.

The game has been in development for two years at this point, and came to Steam Early Access in October 2014. Now a date has been set for when the game will leave Early Access for a proper release: June 1.

Recommended Videos

Massive Chalice will also be headed to Microsoft’s Xbox One “around then” as well, according to a forum post by Double Fine community manager Spaff.

Unlike a lot of Early Access games, Massive Chalice launched in a very playable state. Of course there were performance issues and the game crashed from time to time, but it was clear from the basic gameplay that Double Fine has created something special here.

While the game is most easily described as a turn-based strategy game, Massive Chalice has an ambitious scope, telling a story that spans 300 years. Battles provide the meat of the gameplay, but in the space between battles your surviving soldiers marry, have families, and pass on their genetic traits, resulting in a new generation of soldiers with specific advantages and disadvantages. When soldiers fall in combat, not only are they gone, but so are their traits.

The final 1.0 version of the game won’t “just be about making the game shinier,” Spaff writes in the post. New features are inbound as well, including controller support for the Steam version of the game, achievements, and balance adjustments.

To celebrate the launch, Double Fine will be hosting a live “teamstream” on June 1 on the company’s Twitch channel. As with Broken Age, a series filmed by 2 Player Productions documenting the game’s development, titled Massive Knowledge, will be released alongside the game.

The Early Access version of Massive Chalice is currently available on Steam for $30.

Kris Wouk
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Kris Wouk is a tech writer, gadget reviewer, blogger, and whatever it's called when someone makes videos for the web. In his…
Star Wars Outlaws will no longer punish you with forced stealth sections
Kay shoots stormtroopers in Star Wars Outlaws.

Star Wars Outlaws' next update is set to bring much-requested changes to the struggling game, which Ubisoft said has underperformed since its August launch.

The company and developer Massive Entertainment announced everything included in Title Update 1.4, which was sent out to PC and consoles on Thursday and is set to address some of players' biggest gripes with the open-world RPG.

Read more
Leaker says Valve is working on a Steam Controller 2
A Steam Controller from Valve on a surface. You can see two track pads on top with four buttons in the middle.

Valve is working on a follow-up to its Steam Controller, its Steam Machine accessory first introduced almost a decade ago, according to a prominent leaker.

Brad "SadlyItsBradley" Lynch wrote on X that Valve's second Steam Controller is known internally as "Ibex" and is in mass production.

Read more
RollerCoaster Tycoon Classic will bring PC nostalgia to Nintendo Switch
A very long white rollercoaster going from one edge of the image to another.

RollerCoaster Tycoon Classic has been on mobile and Steam for many years, and it's finally coming to Nintendo Switch this December, Atari announced Thursday. It's available for preorder now on the eShop for $25.

Classic is actually a remastered bundle of the first two RollerCoaster Tycoon games and the three expansion packs: Toolkit, Wacky Worlds, and Time Twister, created by Chris Sawyer. The first debuted in 1999, and it set the standard for some of our favorite management sims. The series has staying power, too, although a lot of the recent entries have all been on mobile, especially for iOS. Atari released RollerCoaster Tycoon Classic, which was made in conjunction with Sawyer, for iOS and Android in 2016, and on Steam in 2017. And by all accounts, despite its age, Classic is absolutely worth the time.

Read more